Digital content excerpt identification

- Amazon

Described herein are techniques for identifying and displaying key excerpts of a digital work and related key excerpts of other digital works. Key excerpts are identified by evaluating (a) the number of interactions by human readers within each of the key excerpts and (b) the number of reviews that reference each of the key excerpts. Related excerpts from other books can be identified by comparing the key excerpts of the other books. Excerpts can be displayed by subject, and links are provided to move from one subject to another.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  ·  References Cited  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description
BACKGROUND

The continued proliferation of digital works has led to an increase in the availability of such works, as well as an increase in the availability of electronic devices and applications used for consuming these works. For instance, users consume digital works, such as electronic books (eBooks), digital videos, digital songs, digital images, and the like, on an assortment of electronic devices. As the number of digital works and devices for consuming digital works continues to increase, users are ever more interested in enhancing their experiences while consuming these works.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The detailed description is described with reference to the accompanying figures. In the figures, the left-most digit(s) of a reference number identifies the figure in which the reference number first appears. The use of the same reference numbers in different figures indicates similar or identical components or features.

FIGS. 1-4 are conceptual illustrations of example formats for presenting and displaying key excerpts relating to subjects of a digital work such as a book.

FIG. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating an example process for identifying key excerpts of a digital work such as a book.

FIG. 6 is a flow diagram illustrating an example process for displaying key excerpts relating to different subjects of a digital work.

FIG. 7 is a conceptual diagram illustrating an example format for presenting and displaying key excerpts from related books.

FIGS. 8 and 9 are conceptual diagrams illustrating an example format for presenting and displaying related key excerpts from different books.

FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustrating an example process for displaying identifying and displaying related key excerpts from different books.

FIG. 11 is a block diagram illustrating delivery of a book and related key excerpts to a book reader device.

FIG. 12 shows an example key excerpt specification that may be used to specify information relating to a key excerpt of a digital work.

FIG. 13 is a conceptual diagram illustrating relationships between key excerpts within and between digital works.

FIG. 14 is a block diagram of an example electronic book reader which may be used to display a digital work and associated key excerpts.

FIG. 15 is a block diagram of a host computing device that may be used to identify and display key excerpts and related key excerpts, and to provide such key excerpts to reader devices.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A device for reading a digital work such as a book is configured to show key excerpts of the book in a scrollable, card-like format in association with a timeline that shows relative positions of the key excerpts within the book. In certain embodiments, key excerpts are determined by ranking book paragraphs based on the number of interactions by human readers within each paragraph and the number of references to each paragraph by reviews and other materials relating to the book. Interactions may include annotating, sharing, quoting, marking, and so forth.

Key excerpts corresponding to different subjects may be identified and displayed. Key excerpts for an “overview” subject, for example, may include the highest ranking excerpts of the book. Similarly a character or person subject may include the highest ranking excerpts of the book that relate to or reference the character or person. When viewing key excerpts relating to one subject, a user may navigate to key excerpts of a related subject.

The device may also be configured to show key excerpts that are related to a currently displayed key excerpt, such as key excerpts having the same subject, even when the related key excerpts are from other books. In order to identify related key excerpts such as this, the key excerpts of multiple books are identified and compared with each other to identify key excerpts that relate to common entities or topics.

In the following discussion, reference is made to digital works, which are described primarily as books or electronic books. More generally, a digital work comprises a unit of digital content such as a book, movie, song, album, compilation, etc. Digital works may include electronic or digital representations of printed works, such as digital content that may include text, multimedia, hypertext, and hypermedia. Examples of printed and/or digital works include, but are not limited to, books, magazines, newspapers, periodicals, journals, reference materials, slide shows, telephone books, textbooks, anthologies, instruction manuals, proceedings of meetings, forms, directories, maps, web pages, and so on. Further, in some implementations, the techniques described herein can be applied to other types of digital works and digital content besides static content works (like books) to include other media forms like video, music, and so forth. Thus, the terms digital work and digital content may refer to any type of content, not limited to books or electronic books.

FIG. 1 shows a device 100 that is capable of displaying digital works such as electronic books. In the illustrated embodiment, the device 100 is a dedicated book reader designed for the specific purpose of displaying books in a format that replicates the experience of reading a paper book. As noted above, different devices 100 may display or play other types of digital content, including video, audio, and various types of multimedia content.

The device 100 has a display or display area 102. The display 102 may in some cases use reflective display technologies, such as electrophoretic and/or electrowetting technologies, that require relatively low power. Displays incorporating such technologies may be referred to as reflective displays. In other cases the display 102 may comprise a conventional light-emitting color display, such as a flat-panel LED (light-emitting diode) display or LCD (liquid crystal display).

In the illustrated embodiment, the display 102 is sensitive to touch so that a user of the device 100 can interact with displayed content by physically interacting with active visual controls or with the content itself. In other embodiments, the device 100 may have separate buttons or other input mechanisms for accepting user input and for allowing a user to navigate among various types of content and controls presented on the display 102.

Although the illustrated example is of a dedicated, handheld electronic book reader device, other devices may also be used for reading electronic books and for displaying other types of digital works, such as smartphones, tablet computers, laptop computers, televisions, wearable devices (e.g., watches, glasses, athletic-focused devices, health monitors, etc.), automobile displays, projecting units, electronic billboards, or any other type of device having a text or graphics display. User input may be by means of touch, sound (e.g., voice, taps, etc.), gesture, keyboards, buttons, pointing devices, and so forth.

In addition to displaying text and other content of an electronic book, the device 100 is configured to present certain excerpts of the book, which have been found to comprise important or other types of key elements of the book, in a format such as shown in FIG. 1. In the following discussion, excerpts that have been evaluated as being important or key elements of the book, in accordance with a method described in FIG. 5, are referred to as key excerpts. In the described embodiment, the key excerpts are displayed within an excerpt area 104 of the display 102.

A particular book may have multiple key excerpts. In the illustrated embodiment, the key excerpts comprise paragraphs that have been identified according to an algorithm that ranks the paragraphs based on user interactions and reader reviews. However, a key excerpt need not be a paragraph. Rather, a key excerpt may comprise any portion of the content, whose bounds are set by syntax, context, range of words, collection of ideas, number of sentences, and/or any other manner.

The key excerpts are displayed one at a time in the excerpt area 104. Scroll controls 106 are displayed on either side of the excerpt area 104 to scroll forward or backward through the key excerpts of the book. Touching the left scroll control 106 causes a previous key excerpt to be presented in the excerpt area 104. Touching the right scroll control 106 causes a subsequent key excerpt to be presented in the excerpt area 104. In some cases, a user may also, or alternatively, scroll through key excerpts by dragging across the excerpt area 104 with a finger to the left or to the right. The device 100 is configured to detect coordinates of finger placement on the display 102, to detect movement of the finger across the excerpt area 104, and to control the display 102 so that the key excerpts appear to move horizontally across the display 102 in response to the movement of the finger across the excerpt area 104. In some embodiments, the key excerpts may be configured to scroll or move vertically instead of horizontally.

In addition to books, the excerpt area 104 may be used to display key excerpts of other types of content, including content other than text. For example, text corresponding to key audio excerpts can be displayed while audio content is playing. As another example, video content (e.g., movies, TV shows, etc.) can be playing while key video excerpts are presented in an excerpt area. Furthermore, multiple devices may be used in some implementations to present the content and associated key excerpts. For instance, video content may be playing on one device, such as a television or other screen, while the key excerpts are displayed on a separate device, such as a tablet, computer, or communication device.

A timeline 108 may also be displayed in conjunction with the excerpt area 104. Horizontal positions along the timeline 108 correspond to locations within the currently loaded or currently active book. Specifically, the left-most position along the timeline 108 corresponds to the beginning of the book. The right-most position along the timeline 108 corresponds to the end of the book. Intermediate positions from left to right along the timeline 108 correspond to intermediate locations from the beginning to the end of the book.

Chapter marks 110 may be presented on or within the timeline 108 to indicate chapter divisions. An excerpt location marker 112 may be positioned along the timeline 108 to indicate the location within the book of the currently displayed key excerpt. A furthest-read marker 114 may be positioned along the timeline 108 to indicate the furthest location within the book that has been read or viewed. The furthest location may be tracked by monitoring a user's progress through a book and repeatedly updating a stored variable that indicates the furthest page within the book that has been displayed. In some cases, this information may be stored in conjunction with an online account of the user and accessed by multiple devices of the user so that the furthest point read is accurate regardless of which device the user chooses to use at any given time.

Excerpt markers 116, small dots in this example, may be positioned along the timeline 108 to indicate the locations of certain key excerpts within the book.

The timeline 108 may comprise an active control that can be manipulated by a user to scroll through multiple key excerpts. For example, the user may touch the excerpt location marker 112 and drag it along the timeline 108 to move to different locations within the book and to display the corresponding key excerpt at each location. The device 100 may sense that the user touches the area of the display 102 corresponding to the timeline 108, may further sense that the user moves their finger along the timeline 108, and may respond by moving the excerpt location marker 112 and changing the excerpt area 104 to display the key excerpt corresponding to the new position of the excerpt location marker 112. Alternatively, a user may simply touch a position along the timeline 108, thereby causing a key excerpt at the corresponding book location to be displayed in the excerpt area 104. In this case, the device 100 may sense the location of the user touch relative to the timeline 108, may move the excerpt location marker 112 to the corresponding location, and may change the excerpt area 104 to display the key excerpt corresponding to the new position of the excerpt location marker 112.

The device 100 may also be configured to present a category menu 118 having items or tabs corresponding to different categories of content. In the illustrated example, categories include “Overview,” “People,” “Terms,” and “Images.” Selecting the “Overview” tab results in the display presentation illustrated in FIG. 1, in which the user may scroll between different key excerpts of the book. Selecting the “People” tab invokes a different display such as an index of key people referenced in the book. Selecting the “Terms” tab invokes yet another display such as an index of key terms used in the book. Selecting the “Images” tab invokes a display such as an index of images or key images contained in the book.

Various referenced entities may be visually highlighted or otherwise emphasized within the excerpt area 104, so that such entities stand out visually with respect to the underlying content. Text corresponding to the entity may be emphasized by shading, by using a distinctive font, by using a contrasting font color, and so forth. Generally, the text is emphasized in a way that makes it apparent that the user can select the text in order to navigate to corresponding or related information.

Generally, an entity in this context may comprise a named entity, a character, a person, a place, an event, an object, a term, etc. In some implementations, each emphasized entity may be selectable by the user. Selecting an emphasized entity may invoke a display relating to that entity, such as the display shown in FIG. 4, described below. Alternatively, or additionally, an “Also see:” section 120 may be presented, indicating entities that are relevant to the currently displayed excerpt. A user may select any one of the entities within the “Also see:” section, which invokes a display relating to the entity.

The excerpt area 104 may also include an excerpt action menu 122 containing controls that can be selected by a user to perform actions relating to the currently displayed key excerpt. For example, such controls may include a “go to” control that may be selected to display a reading view of the full text of the active book at the location of the currently displayed key excerpt. The controls may also include a “share” control that may be selected to share the displayed key excerpt, such as by sharing the key excerpt and related information on a social media account of the user. The controls may also include a “highlight” control that may be selected to highlight the displayed key excerpt in book reading views.

A book title heading 124 may be used to indicate the title of the currently loaded or active electronic book.

FIG. 2 shows an alternative format or presentation of key excerpts relating to an active book. The format of FIG. 2 is similar to that of FIG. 1 except that the excerpt area 104 in this example is configured as a plurality of individual panes or cards 202 that are visually stacked, cascaded, or overlaid on each other. Each of the cards 202 corresponds to a key excerpt of the book. Only the topmost of the cards is fully visible at any time, and the text of underlying cards may be hidden by overlying cards. A user may select the scroll controls 106 to move through the stacked cards 202. Alternatively, the user may scroll through the cards by dragging their finger across the currently displayed card 202. For example, dragging the currently displayed card to the right may expose the immediately underlying card and its associated text, while the previously displayed card moves off of the display area and conceptually moves to the bottom of the stack. The display 102 may be configured to detect the location and movement of the user's finger across the excerpt area 104 and may respond by controlling the display 102 so that the displayed cards 202 appear to move along with the user's finger.

FIG. 2 also has a subject heading 204 indicating the type or subject of the key excerpts displayed in the excerpt area 104. In this case, the displayed key excerpts are overview key excerpts, relating to the general content of the book.

FIG. 3 shows yet another format, configuration, or presentation style for the excerpt area 104. In FIG. 3 the excerpt area 104 is configured as a plurality of individual panes or cards 302 that are conceptually arranged in a horizontal row, within which only one of the cards is fully visible at any time. Specifically, a central card 302(a) is fully visible and the edges of adjacent cards 302(b) and 302(c) are partially visible at the sides of the excerpt area 104. In this example, a user may scroll through the cards 302 by dragging their finger horizontally across the display 102. For example, dragging the currently displayed card 302(a) to the right may move the side card 302(b) into the display area, replacing the previously displayed card 302(a). Directional controls, keys, or other mechanisms may also be used for scrolling the cards 302. The display 102 may be configured to detect the location and movement of the user's finger across the excerpt area 104 and may respond by controlling the display 102 so that the displayed cards 302 appear to move in this fashion. Touching the side cards 302(b) or 302(c) may also cause the cards to scroll.

FIG. 3 also shows a modification of the timeline 108 to hide a portion 304 of the timeline 108 corresponding to a portion of the book that has not been read, such as the part of the book beyond the point indicated by the furthest-read marker 114. In some implementations, the user may be prevented from scrolling to key excerpts that are beyond the location indicated by the furthest-read marker 114.

FIG. 4 shows an example format for presenting key excerpts relating to a different subject. Generally, there may be a set of key excerpts and an associated timeline for each of multiple subjects within a digital work. In the previous examples, key excerpts of a “general” or “overview” subject were displayed. In the example of FIG. 4, displayed key excerpts are of a person subject. Particularly, key excerpts relating to the subject “Katniss Everdeen,” as indicated by the subject heading 204, are displayed in the excerpt area 104. The excerpt markers 116 of the timeline 108 indicate the locations of the excerpts relating to the current subject. Note that the excerpt area 104 in this situation may be formatted in different ways such as illustrated by the examples of FIGS. 1-3.

In addition to the overview subject, different subjects may comprise, without limitation:

    • different characters;
    • different entities;
    • different named entities;
    • different objects;
    • different terms;
    • different places;
    • different events; or
    • different topics.

A user may navigate between different timelines and their associated key excerpts in various ways. A user may select an entity, which corresponds to a subject, from either the excerpt area 104 or the “Also see:” section 120. Selecting an entity or subject in this manner changes the currently displayed subject to the selected subject. In FIG. 4, for example, a user may select the subject “President Snow” from either the excerpt area 104 or the “Also see:” section 120, which will change the currently displayed subject to “President Snow” and will cause the displayed excerpts to be those relating to the subject “President Snow.” In FIG. 1, as another example, a user may select any of the subjects “Effie Trinket,” Primrose Everdeen,” Peeta Mellark,” or “reaping” to move to one of those subjects. When a subject is selected, the timeline 108 changes to show the positions of the key excerpts relating to the selected subject and the excerpt area 104 displays cards or key excerpts relating to the selected subject.

A user may also select an entity from various indexes that may be presented in conjunction with the currently loaded book. For example, selecting the “People” item of the category menu 118 (FIG. 1) may present a list or index of key people of a book, and a user may select one of those people to display a timeline and associated key excerpts relating to the selected person, where the subject corresponds to the person.

Selections for related subject matter may be based on any number of factors. In one implementation, the selection is based on relationships formed in the content of various key excerpt cards. For example, in FIG. 4, one card 202 includes reference to both President Snow and Miss Everdeen. As a result, these two characters or people would be related and other cards with reference to President Snow or Miss Everdeen would be identified and offered as possible interest to the user. In other implementations, the selection may be based on whether subject matter shows up in the same scene or some other logical segmentation of the digital work, such as a chapter or section of a book, or scene of a movie.

FIG. 5 shows an example process 500 for identifying or selecting key excerpts of a digital work 502 or other digital content. The digital work 502 may comprise an electronic book in the described examples, although the work or content may comprise other types of media as mentioned above. The process 500 may be performed by a computer or group of computers prior to providing books to electronic book readers, so that electronic books may be provided with associated timelines and key excerpts relating to multiple subjects. The process 500 may be performed by or on behalf of a content provider and/or content infrastructure that supports distribution of digital works to multiple electronic readers.

An action 504 comprises obtaining the text 506 of the digital work 502. An action 508 comprises identifying locations within the text 506 at which readers have interacted with the digital work 502. More specifically, the action 508 may comprise, for each reader of multiple human readers, identifying one or more locations within the text 506 at which the reader interacted with the digital work, wherein the user interactions are determined based on metadata associated with words of the text, and wherein the metadata indicates one or more of annotating, quoting, sharing, or marking by the reader. A user may annotate a digital work by composing notes or comments that are associated with particular locations of the digital work. A user may quote or share portions of a digital work in reviews or in comments on social media sites. A user may mark portions of a digital work by underlining, highlighting, or otherwise recording certain portions of the digital work. A particular reader device or application may provide for annotating, quoting, sharing, or marking in various ways, such as through menus, on-screen controls, detection of user gestures, etc.

A location in this context may comprise a particular point within the text 506, a paragraph of the text 506, or some other delineation of content, which may be indicated by character or word counts with respect to the beginning of the book. In other types of content such as audio or video, a location may correspond to a time from the beginning of the content as indicated by number of minutes, seconds, or other time segments. Some types of content, such as audio books, may have locations indicated in terms of both character or word count and elapsed time. Alternatively, a location may correspond to a scene or other segment of a digital work.

In embodiments in which excerpts comprise paragraphs, the action 508 may comprise determining an annotation location associated with a particular location within the content and determining that the word location is within a range of word locations associated a particular paragraph.

The action 508 may draw from a database 510 of archived reader interactions by multiple human readers with respect to multiple digital works. For example, electronic reader devices or applications of a particular distribution infrastructure may be designed to allow users to mark (such as by highlighting or underlining), quote, share, or annotate within a digital work. These interactions may be recorded and archived by the infrastructure and used as the basis for the action 508.

An action 512 comprises, for each of multiple reviews of the digital work 502, analyzing the review to determine one or more locations within the text 506 that the review references. The action 512 may draw from a database 514 of archived reviews of multiple digital works. For example, a particular distribution infrastructure may provide public forums or feedback mechanisms allowing purchasers of digital works to provide textual reviews of the digital works. Reviews may also be obtained from various social media sites, from various publications that may include reviews by critics, and so forth. With respect to social media, the reviews may be extracted or assumed from the context of the social media interactions, such as emotive views expressed in tweets or on social media posts. Reviews may also include marketing materials associated with digital works, such as synopses, summaries, book flap text, etc.

The action 512 may comprise approximate string matching, sometimes referred to as fuzzy string searching, implemented to find text strings within the text 506 that at least approximately match text strings within the reviews 514 of the digital work 502. In some cases, n-gram matching may be used to find consecutive word matches between the reviews and the digital work, wherein the n-grams range in length from five to ten words.

An action 516 comprises generating interaction scores 518 for respective locations within the text 506, wherein each interaction score 518 comprises the number or a function of the number of readers who interacted with the text at a particular location.

An action 520 comprises generating review scores 522 for respective locations within the text 506, wherein each review score is the number or a function of the number of the reviews that reference the text of the digital work at a particular location. In some cases, the review scores may be weighted by social media information, such as popularity ratings or “likes” corresponding respectively to each of the reviews 514.

An action 524 comprises calculating a composite score 526 corresponding to each of multiple excerpts of the text 506, wherein each composite score 526 is a function of those interaction scores 518 and review scores 522 that correspond to locations within the corresponding excerpt. The composite score 526 for a particular excerpt may for example comprise the sum of those interaction scores 518 and review scores 522 that correspond to locations within the excerpt. In some cases, the interaction scores and review scores may be weighted or normalized prior to calculating the composite score 526.

An action 528 comprises ranking excerpts of the digital work 502 in accordance with the composite scores 526 of the excerpts. Excerpts with higher composite scores are given higher rankings. In some cases, the excerpts may be ranked by their composite scores on a logarithmic scale.

An action 530 comprises selecting and providing a set of the excerpts to indicate important or key parts of the digital work. The excerpts of the set are referred to as key excerpts. Key excerpts may be selected based on any number of factors. In one case, key excerpts may comprise the highest ranking excerpts from the ranking action 528. In other implementations, key excerpts are selected based in part on their position and context within the work. For instance, a dispersion algorithm may be applied to ensure a more distributed selection of key excerpts throughout the work. In the absence of quotes or highlights, selection may involve choosing the first paragraph of each chapter or section, or choosing key excerpts from every section that contains reference to certain subject matter, such as a main character. Any number of weighting and/or filtering techniques may be used to weight various paragraphs or portions of a digital work in the absence of user highlights, quotes, or other interactions.

An action 532 comprises providing the digital work 502 to an electronic reader or other device along with a specification of the highest ranking or otherwise selected excerpts. In certain embodiments, a certain percentage of the existing excerpts may be selected and indicated to the electronic reader along with the digital work. In certain embodiments, highest ranking excerpts within each section or chapter of the digital work may be selected as key excerpts.

The number of key excerpts selected for a particular book may be based on the length of the book. The number of key excerpts selected within each chapter of a book may be based on chapter length. In some cases, excerpts having a ranking above a certain threshold may be selected as key excerpts. In cases where no excerpts of a chapter are above the threshold, the first excerpt of the chapter may be selected as a key excerpt representative of the chapter. In some cases, additional key excerpts may be selected regarding particular characters or entities, such as paragraphs that introduce particular characters or entities. In some cases, excerpts that may otherwise qualify as key excerpts may be disqualified based on certain factors, such as when such an excerpt does not relate to key characters or subjects of the book. In some cases, the ranking of a paragraph may be weighted based on whether or not the paragraph contains or references a key subject of the digital work, with paragraphs that do contain or reference a key subject being weighted more highly than those that do not.

Locations and key excerpts within the text 506 may correspond to different units of text, corresponding to different levels of granularity. In certain embodiments, the locations to which interaction and review scores correspond may comprise sentences. Key excerpts may comprise paragraphs. In some cases, only paragraphs having at least a threshold length are considered as valid excerpts or key excerpts.

The process 500 may be used to identify top ranking excerpts of the digital work as a whole, which may be designated as being related to the “overview” or “general” subject described above. In addition, the process 500 may be used to identify top ranking excerpts relating to a particular entity or subject by constraining the action 524 to text locations that are within excerpts of the text 506 that reference or relate to the entity or subject. When identifying key excerpts relating to a particular character, for example, only those interaction and review scores 518 and 522 that correspond to locations within excerpts relating to that particular character are considered when calculating the composite score 526. Rankings of excerpts identified in this manner, with regarding to a particular subject, may be provided as an indication of relative importance of excerpts that reference or relate to the particular subject.

In some cases, the process 500 may be performed separately for different defined sections of a digital work, and the top ranking excerpts may comprise the highest ranking excerpts from each section. This ensures that key excerpts will be evenly distributed throughout the sections of a book. Sections may correspond to chapters, scenes, topical divisions, or other logical divisions within the content.

As an example, the process 500 may be implemented by (a) defining a first section of the digital work, wherein the first section of the digital work comprises a first set of contiguous paragraphs; (b) defining a second section of the digital work, wherein the second section of the digital work comprises a second set of multiple contiguous paragraphs; (c) specifying a first paragraph from the first section of the digital work for presentation in conjunction with the digital work; and (d) specifying a second paragraph from the second section of the digital work for presentation in conjunction with the digital work.

FIG. 6 shows an example process 600 for displaying key excerpts relating to different subjects and for allowing a user to navigate between timelines and key excerpts relating to different subjects. The process 600 may be performed by a device such as a handheld reader device.

A book or other digital work may be formatted or delivered as a distribution package 602, containing book text and/or other content 604 and multiple key excerpt sets 606. The content 604 may include the text of the digital work as well as accompanying illustrations, diagrams, pictures, or other associated content. The key excerpts of the sets 606 may also include or comprise objects other than text, such as illustrations, diagrams, pictures, drawings, or other non-text items of a digital work.

Each key excerpt set 606 may relate to a different subject of the digital work, and may contain multiple key excerpts relating to the subject. Each subject may comprise, without limitation:

    • an overview of the digital work;
    • a character;
    • an entity;
    • a named entity;
    • an object;
    • a term;
    • a place;
    • an event; or
    • a topic.
      For purposes of discussion, it is assumed that the excerpts comprise at least a first set of key excerpts corresponding or relating to a first subject and a second set of key excerpts corresponding or relating to a second subject.

An action 608 comprises receiving a digital work and presenting or displaying at least a portion of the digital work on the display of an electronic device such as an electronic book reader. The digital work may be presented as pages that can be scrolled for individual viewing using various input mechanisms such as touch, keyboard input, or dedicated buttons. For example, a digital reader may detect finger placement and movement on a screen and may respond by navigating through pages of the book.

Receiving the digital work may include receiving the text or other content 604 along with an indication or specification of multiple key excerpts, such as the key excerpt sets 606. In certain implementations, the key excerpts 606 may have been selected and/or ranked based at least in part on (a) a number of interactions by human readers within each of the excerpts and (b) a number of reviews that reference each of the excerpts. In certain embodiments, the indicated excerpts may be identified or ranked in accordance with the process 500 of FIG. 5.

An action 610, which is performed in response to a user input, comprises displaying a first set of cards and an associated first timeline, both of which relate to the first subject. Each card corresponds to or contains a key excerpt of the key excerpt sets 606, which may in turn comprise a key paragraph of the book. The action 610 may comprise presenting the cards in a scrollable format and visibly scrolling through the cards to display a selected one of the cards. Scrolling may be implemented in various ways, including but not limited to:

    • detecting selection of a point along the first timeline;
    • detecting dragging across the first timeline;
    • detecting selection of a directional control; or
    • detecting dragging across an excerpt area in which the first excerpts are presented.

As described above, the first timeline may indicate a location within the digital work of the currently displayed card. The first timeline may also indicate the relative locations of other cards of the first set relating to the first subject. The action 610 may utilize any of the display formats that have already been described with reference to FIGS. 1-4.

An action 612 comprises displaying an indication of the second subject along with the currently displayed card. The second subject may be any subject that is related to the currently displayed card in some way, such as being referenced by the currently displayed card. Referring to FIG. 1 as an example, the second subject may be indicated by highlighting in the excerpt area 104, such as are the subjects “Effie Trinket” and “Primrose Everdeen.” As another example illustrated by FIG. 1, the “Also see:” section may indicate related subjects.

An action 614 comprises receiving user input such as a selection of the second subject. For example a user may touch or otherwise select one of the indicated or highlighted subjects shown in FIG. 1.

An action 616 is performed in response to receiving the user selection of the second subject. The action 616 comprises presenting cards relating to the second subject, in a scrollable format for visibly scrolling through the cards to display a selected one of the cards. The action 616 also comprises displaying a second timeline with the cards of the second subject. As already described, such a timeline indicates a location within the digital work of the currently displayed one of the cards. The timeline may also indicate the relative locations of other cards of the second subject.

In some cases, the key excerpts 606 may include key excerpts from different books or other digital works. As one example, key excerpts may be included from other books that are related as works of the same series, as works having common authorship, or as works having a common subject. As another example, key excerpts may be included from other books based on similarities of the key excerpts of the other books to the key excerpts of the displayed book. A process for identifying related or similar key excerpts from other books will be described below with reference to FIG. 10.

FIG. 7 shows an example of a display format for presenting key excerpts of works that are related to the currently loaded book, such as books of a common series, books having common authorship, or books having a common topic. In this example, a book navigation control 702 has a left selector 704(a) and a right selector 704(b) that can be selected by a user to move between related works. A heading 706 within the navigation control 702 indicates the title of the currently selected related work. The excerpt area 104 is configured to display the key overview excerpts of the related work indicated by the heading 706, and the timeline 108 is configured so that it shows positions of the displayed key excerpts relative to the work indicated by the heading 706. The book title heading 124 continues to show the title of the book that is currently loaded for reading by the device 100.

FIGS. 8 and 9 show an example of a display format for presenting related key excerpts from other books. As will be described in more detail below with reference to FIG. 10, a key excerpt of a particular book may be associated with related key excerpts of other books. Associated key excerpts may be related because they describe the same scene or topic, because they reference the same person or entity, or for other reasons.

In the example of FIG. 8, a selected key excerpt 802 of the currently active book is displayed in the excerpt area 104. A related excerpts section 804 is partially shown below the excerpt area 104 on the display 102. In various implementations, related key excerpts may be found in the same book, in different books altogether, or a combination. Further, the related key excerpts may be based on the content of cards, particular subjects (e.g., characters or places), or through other associations. For instance, cards with the same person (John Adams) may be used to identify any cards from any works that also mention that person.

In response to user input such as dragging upward, the related excerpts area 804 may be moved or scrolled upward so that it is visible as shown in FIG. 9. The original key excerpt 802 may also move upward and may shrink in order to make room for the related excerpts area 804. Once visible, the related excerpts area 804 may be scrolled from side to side in order to view key excerpts that are related or similar to the original key excerpt 802. The related key excerpts may include key excerpts from the currently active book as well as key excerpts from other books. The name of the work that contains the currently displayed related key excerpt may be displayed in a related title heading 902. The title heading 124 continues to indicate the name of the currently loaded book. In some cases, the related title heading 902 may comprise a link that allows the user to open or navigate to the indicated book. If the user does not already own or have access to the book, the user may be given the option of purchasing the book.

FIG. 8 also illustrates the use of a subject summary section 806, containing text introducing or summarizing the current subject. A summary section such as this may be used in conjunction with any of the formats described above to present information about the subject of the currently displayed key excerpt.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example process 1000 for identifying, providing, and displaying related sets of excerpts from different books. An action 1002 comprises, for multiple digital works, identifying key excerpts of the digital works. Identifying key excerpts of a digital work may be performed in accordance with the process 500 of FIG. 5, which is generally based on (a) a number of interactions by human readers within each of the key excerpts and/or (b) a number of reviews that reference each of the key excerpts. The action 1002 results in key excerpts 1004 corresponding to different digital works. One or more sets of key excerpts 1004 may be associated with each of multiple digital works.

An action 1006 comprises performing topic and entity extraction to determine one or more topics of each key excerpt 1004 and one or more entities of each key excerpt 1004. An entity may comprise a person, a thing, an object, a place, a name or named entity, a term, etc. Topic and entity extraction may be performed across the key excerpts 1004 of multiple books using available techniques such as probabilistic latent semantic analysis (pLSA) or latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) algorithms, including trained LDA algorithms. Annotations and quotes made by customers within the key excerpts may be analyzed to identify the one or more topics or entities and used in conjunction with such LDA algorithms to identify other topics or entities that are semantically or conceptually related.

An action 1008 comprises, for each key excerpt of each digital work, identifying one or more related key excerpts of one or more other digital works, such that the key excerpt and the one or more related key excerpts have a common topic or entity. The action 1008 may be performed by creating a vector space model for each key excerpt and comparing the models of each key excerpt. The action 1008 results in an association between a given key excerpt of a given book with multiple related key excerpts of multiple different books.

An action 1010 comprises providing the related key excerpts with the content of a particular digital book. Specifically, all key excerpts from other books that relate to key excerpts of the particular digital book are specified or provided with the particular book.

An action 1012 comprises displaying the particular book, its key excerpts, and the related key excerpts on the display of a reader device. The book and key excerpts may be formatted and displayed as described above with reference to FIGS. 8 and 9. For example, the reader device may initially display content of a first book in a reading view. In response to first user input, the reader device may display a first key excerpt of the first book. In response to second user input, the reader device may display second key excerpts that relate to the first key excerpt. The second key excerpts may be from different books, and may be presented in a scrollable format so that a user may move between the related key excerpts of the different books. As a particular related key excerpt is displayed, the title of the book it is from may also be displayed.

In some cases, the related key excerpts may limited to key excerpts from related books, such as the works of a series, works having common authorship, or works having a common subject.

FIG. 11 illustrates an example of providing digital content to the device 100. A book or other digital work may be formatted and/or delivered as a package 1102 from an infrastructure or content repository 1104. The package 1102 may contain book text and/or other content 1106 and an excerpt listing 1108. The book content 1106 may comprise the text of the book, as well as accompanying illustrations, diagrams, pictures, or other associated content. The excerpt listing 1108 may indicate key excerpts of the book content 1106, including key excerpts relating to different subjects. The excerpt listing 1108 may also indicate key excerpts of other books that are related to key excerpts of the book represented by the book package 1102.

FIG. 12 shows an example of an excerpt specification 1202. The excerpt listing 1108 may contain multiple excerpt specifications 1202, corresponding respectively to different key excerpts of the book content 1106. Each excerpt specification 1202 indicates information that is sufficient for the device 100 to locate and display key excerpts of the digital work, as well as related key excerpts of other digital works.

A location field 1204 indicates the location within the book of the key excerpt. The location field may specify a particular paragraph or may specify the start and end of a key excerpt in terms of character counts from the beginning of the book.

An entity field 1206 may be used to specify subjects of the key excerpt and/or entities to which the key excerpt relates. Entities may include named entities, characters, people, places, events, objects, terms, and so forth. The indicated entities may in some cases comprise the entities that are specifically referenced within the key excerpt.

A related key excerpt field 1208 may indicate or specify one or more related key excerpts. Related key excerpts may comprise key excerpts from different books as described above with reference to FIG. 10. In some cases, the related key excerpt field 1208 may contain the key excerpts from the different books so that they may be displayed in conjunction with the key excerpt specified by the excerpt specification 1202.

FIG. 13 provides a conceptual illustration of relationships between key excerpts that may be explicitly or implicitly specified by key excerpt specifications such as the excerpt specification 1202 of FIG. 12. Key excerpts in this illustration are shown as nodes of a graph, with lines between the nodes representing relationships between the key excerpts.

A particular book 1302 may contain multiple sets of key excerpts, including a first set 1304(a) and a second set 1304(b). For purposes of discussion, assume that the first key excerpt set 1304(a) relates to a first subject and the second key excerpt set 1304(b) relates to a second subject.

The key excerpts within each key excerpt set 1304 are related to each other by having a common subject. The timeline or sequential relationships (left to right in FIG. 13) within a subject are defined by the locations of the key excerpts within the book 1302.

A particular key excerpt 1306 within the first key excerpt set 1304(a) may be related to the key excerpts of the second key excerpt set 1304 by having a common subject. For example, the key excerpt 1306 may relate to both the first subject and the second subject. Accordingly, the key excerpts of the set 1304(b) may be related to the key excerpt 1306.

The particular key excerpt 1306 may also be related directly to another key excerpt 1308 by having a common subject.

In addition, the key excerpt 1306 may be related to a third set of key excerpts 1310 that are not within the same book 1302 as the first and second sets 1304(a) and 1304(b) of key excerpts, and that may be in multiple different books. This type of relationship may be defined or identified by the process 1000 of FIG. 10. Key excerpts related in this way may relate to the same scene, topic, person, or other entity.

Although example relationships are shown for an arbitrarily selected key excerpt 1306, each of the illustrated key excerpts may have similar types of relationships both within a single book and with key excerpts of other books.

FIG. 14 illustrates select example components of the electronic device 100 that may be used to implement the functionality described above according to some implementations. In a very basic configuration, the electronic device 100 includes, or accesses, components such as at least one processor 1402 and computer-readable media 1404. Each processor 1402 may itself comprise one or more processors or cores. Depending on the configuration of the electronic device 100, the computer-readable media 1404 may be an example of non-transitory computer storage media and may include volatile and nonvolatile memory and/or removable and non-removable media implemented in any type of technology for storage of information such as computer-readable instructions, data structures, program modules or other data. Such computer-readable media includes, but is not limited to, RAM, ROM, EEPROM, flash memory or other computer-readable media technology, CD-ROM, digital versatile disks (DVD) or other optical storage, magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, solid state storage, magnetic disk storage, RAID storage systems, storage arrays, network attached storage, storage area networks, cloud storage, or any other medium that can be used to store information and which can be accessed by the processor 1402 directly or through another computing device. Accordingly, the computer-readable media 1404 may be computer-readable media able to maintain instructions, modules or components executable by the processor 1402.

The computer-readable media 1404 may be used to store any number of functional components that are executable by the processor 1402. In some implementations, these functional components comprise instructions or programs that are executable by the processor 1402 and that, when executed, implement operational logic for performing the actions attributed above to the electronic device 100. The computer-readable media 1404 may also store data, data structures, and the like that are used by the functional components.

The device 100 may include the display 102, which may be passive, emissive or any other form of display. In one implementation, the display uses reflective display technology, which is bi-stable, meaning that it is capable of holding text or other rendered images even when very little or no power is supplied to the display. Some examples of suitable reflective displays that may be used with the implementations described herein include bi-stable LCDs, MEMS, cholesteric, pigmented electrophoretic, and others. In other implementations, or for other types of devices, the display 102 may be an active display such as a liquid crystal display, plasma display, light emitting diode display, organic light emitting diode display, and so forth. These displays may comprise drive electronics, such as a display drive matrix configured to affect individual pixels within the display 102. Additionally, in some implementations, the display 102 may be a 3D display capable of providing a 3D image. For example, the display 102 may produce a 3D image by providing alternating left-eye and right-eye images with or without the use of shuttering or filtering eyeglasses. Accordingly, in some implementations, the visual representations and other user interface components herein may be rendered in 3D or using dynamic perspective in which objects may appear to have shadows, parallax, and other effects that change depending on the viewpoint of the user to produce an illusion of depth.

One or more communication interfaces 1406 may support both wired and wireless connection to various networks, such as cellular networks, radio, WiFi networks, short-range or near-field networks (e.g., Bluetooth®), infrared signals, local area networks, wide area networks, the Internet, and so forth. For example, the communication interface 1406 may allow a user of the electronic device 100 to access the World Wide Web, download digital works and supplemental information from the infrastructure or repository 1104, access supplemental online content, such as a from a website or other network location, and the like. The communication interface 1406 may further allow a user to access storage on another device, such as a user's computing device, a network attached storage device, or the like.

The electronic device 100 may further be equipped with various other input/output (I/O) components 1408. Such I/O components may include a touchscreen and various user controls (e.g., buttons, a joystick, a keyboard, a mouse, etc.), speakers, a microphone for capturing user speech and other sounds, different types of cameras for detecting user motions and gestures, connection ports, and so forth. User controls may include page turning buttons, navigational keys, a power on/off button, selection keys, and so on. Additionally, the electronic device 100 may include various other components 1410 that are not shown, examples of which include removable storage, a power source, such as a battery and power control unit, a global positioning system (GPS) device, a PC Card component, and so forth.

FIG. 15 illustrates select components of an example server, computer, or host computing device 1502, one or more of which may be configured to perform the processes of FIGS. 5 and 10. The example host computing device 1502 includes one or more processors 1504, computer-readable media 1506, and one or more communication interfaces 1508. The processor(s) 1504 may comprise a single processing unit or a number of processing units, and may include single or multiple computing units or multiple cores. The processor(s) 1504 can be configured to fetch and execute computer-readable instructions stored in the computer-readable media 1506 or other computer-readable media.

The computer-readable media 1506 may include volatile and nonvolatile memory and/or removable and non-removable media implemented in any type of technology for storage of information, such as computer-readable instructions, data structures, program modules or other data. Such computer-readable media includes, but is not limited to, RAM, ROM, EEPROM, flash memory or other memory technology, CD-ROM, digital versatile disks (DVD) or other optical storage, magnetic cassettes, magnetic tape, solid state storage, magnetic disk storage, RAID storage systems, storage arrays, network attached storage, storage area networks, cloud storage, or any other medium that can be used to store the desired information and that can be accessed by a computing device. Depending on the configuration of the computing device 1502, the computer-readable media 1506 may be a type of computer-readable storage media and may be a non-transitory storage media.

The computer-readable media 1506 may be used to store any number of functional components that are executable by the processors 1504. In many implementations, these functional components comprise instructions or programs that are executable by the processors 1504 and that, when executed, implement operational logic for performing the actions described above with reference to FIGS. 5 and 10. The computer-readable memory may also be used for storing multiple book packages such as the book packages 602 and 1102 shown in FIGS. 6 and 11, respectively.

The host computing device 1502 may include communication interface(s) 1508, which may include one or more interfaces and hardware components for enabling communication with various other devices, such as the electronic devices 100, over a wide-area network such as the Internet.

The host computing device(s) 1502 may further be equipped with various input/output components 1510. Such I/O components 1510 may include a display, various user interface controls (e.g., buttons, mouse, keyboard, touch screen, etc.), audio speakers, connection ports and so forth.

The host computing device(s) 1502 may also include many other logical, programmatic and physical components 1512, of which those described above are merely examples that are related to the discussion herein.

The various processes and techniques described herein may be implemented at least in part by software, comprising instructions that are stored or maintained by the computer-readable memory of the device 100, the host computing device 1502, and/or of any other device, or by independent computer-readable memory that is used for storing and transferring the software.

This disclosure provides various example implementations, as described and as illustrated in the drawings. However, this disclosure is not limited to the implementations described and illustrated herein, but can extend to other implementations, as would be known or as would become known to those skilled in the art. Reference in the specification to “one implementation,” “this implementation,” “these implementations” or “some implementations” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described is included in at least one implementation, and the appearances of these phrases in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same implementation. Additionally, the example processes described herein are only examples of processes provided for discussion purposes. Numerous other variations will be apparent to those of skill in the art in light of the disclosure herein. Further, while the disclosure herein sets forth several examples of suitable frameworks, architectures and environments for executing the processes, implementations herein are not limited to the particular examples shown and discussed.

Claims

1. One or more non-transitory computer-readable media maintaining instructions executable by one or more processors to perform acts comprising:

determining key paragraphs of a digital work based at least in part on a number of user interactions within each paragraph of the key paragraphs and a number of reader reviews of the digital work that reference each paragraph of the key paragraphs, wherein metadata is used to identify a location of each paragraph of the key paragraphs within the digital work;
receiving a first user selection of a first character referenced by the digital work;
determining a first portion of the key paragraphs based at least in part on the first user selection, wherein the first portion of the key paragraphs relates to the first character referenced by the digital work;
displaying a first paragraph of the first portion of the key paragraphs;
displaying an indication of a second character referenced by the digital work in conjunction with the first paragraph, wherein the second character is associated with the first character;
displaying a first timeline in conjunction with the first portion of the key paragraphs, wherein the first timeline indicates a location of the first paragraph of the first portion within the digital work, the first timeline corresponds to locations within the digital work from a beginning of the digital work to an end of the digital work, and the first timeline includes first indicators corresponding to locations of each paragraph of the first portion of the key paragraphs;
hiding a portion of the first timeline corresponding to a portion of the digital work beyond a furthest displayed portion of the digital work;
receiving a second user selection of the second character;
determining a second portion of the key paragraphs based at least in part on the second user selection, wherein the second portion of the key paragraphs relates to the second character referenced by the digital work;
displaying a first paragraph of the second portion of the key paragraphs;
displaying a second timeline in conjunction with the second portion of the key paragraphs, wherein the second timeline indicates a location of the first paragraph of the second portion within the digital work, and the second timeline includes second indicators corresponding to locations of each paragraph of the second portion of the key paragraphs;
receiving a third user selection indicating a second paragraph of the second portion; and
updating, based at least in part on receiving the third user selection, the second timeline, wherein the second timeline indicates a location of the second paragraph of the second portion of the key paragraphs.

2. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 1, wherein the first timeline is displayed horizontally.

3. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 1, wherein the first portion of the key paragraphs is scrollable by at least one of:

detecting a selection of a point along the first timeline;
detecting dragging across the first timeline;
detecting a selection of a directional control; or
detecting dragging across an area in which paragraphs of the first portion of the key paragraphs are displayed.

4. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 1, wherein the digital work is a first digital work, the acts further comprising:

determining key paragraphs of a second digital work based at least in part on a number of user interactions within each paragraph of the key paragraphs of the second digital work and a number of reader reviews of the second digital work that reference each paragraph of the key paragraphs of the second digital work;
receiving a fourth user selection of the second digital work; and
displaying, on the display, a first paragraph of the key paragraphs of the second digital work.

5. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 1, wherein determining the key paragraphs of the digital work is further based at least in part on the number of user interactions being at least a threshold number of user interactions and the number of reviews being at least a threshold number of reviews.

6. The one or more non-transitory computer-readable media of claim 1, the acts further comprising:

ranking paragraphs of the first portion of the key paragraphs; and
determining a highest-ranked paragraph of the first portion of key paragraphs, wherein the first paragraph of the first portion of the key paragraphs is the highest-ranked paragraph.

7. A device comprising:

a display;
one or more processors; and
one or more non-transitory computer-readable media storing computer-executable instructions that, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to perform acts comprising: selecting, using metadata associated with word locations of first digital content, first excerpts of the first digital content based at least in part on a number of user interactions within individual excepts of the first excerpts being at least a threshold number of user interactions and a number of reviews of the first digital content that reference the individual excerpts of the first excerpts being at least a threshold number of reviews, wherein the first digital content comprises a first digital work, wherein an excerpt of the first excerpts includes information fields for a location of the excerpt within the first digital content, a subject of the excerpt, and a related excerpt from a different digital content; selecting, using metadata associated with word locations of second digital content, second excerpts of the second digital content based at least in part on a number of user interactions within individual excepts of the second excerpts being at least a threshold number of user interactions and a number of reviews of the second digital content that reference the individual excepts of the second excerpts being at least a threshold number of reviews, wherein the second digital content comprises a second digital work; displaying a first excerpt of the first excerpts on the display; displaying a first timeline in association with the first excerpts on the display, the first timeline indicating a location of the first excerpt of the first excerpts within the first digital content; displaying, on the display, at least a portion of a first excerpt of the second excerpts in association with the first excerpt of the first excerpts, the first excerpt of the second excerpts being related to the first excerpt of the first excerpts; receiving a selection of the first excerpt of the second excerpts; and displaying the first excerpt of the second excerpts on the display.

8. The device of claim 7, wherein each of the first digital work and the second digital work comprises a book.

9. The device of claim 7, wherein the first digital content and the second digital content relate to the subject, and wherein the subject includes at least one of:

an overview of the second digital work;
a character;
an entity;
a named entity;
an object;
a term;
a place;
an event; or
a topic.

10. The device of claim 9, wherein each of the first digital content and the second digital content comprises a book.

11. The device of claim 7, the acts further comprising displaying a second timeline with the second excerpts on the display, the second timeline indicating a location of the first excerpt of the second excerpts within the second digital content.

12. The device of claim 7, wherein:

the first timeline is displayed horizontally and corresponds to locations within the first digital content from a beginning of the first digital content to an end of the first digital content; and
the first timeline includes indicators corresponding to locations of the first excerpts of the first set within the first digital content.

13. The device of claim 7, wherein the first excerpts are scrollable by at least one of:

detecting selection of a point along the first timeline;
detecting dragging across the first timeline;
detecting selection of a directional control; or
detecting dragging across an excerpt area in which the first excerpts are presented.

14. The device of claim 7, wherein the first digital work comprises a first book and the second digital work comprises a second book, and first digital work and the second digital work related by at least one of a book series, a common authorship, or a common subject.

15. A method, comprising:

determining, using metadata associated with word locations of a digital content, an indication corresponding to a furthest displayed portion of the digital content;
selecting first excerpts of the digital content based at least in part on a number of user interactions within individual excerpts of the first excerpts being at least a threshold number of user interactions and a number of reviews of the digital content that reference the individual excerpts of the first excerpts being at least a threshold number of reviews, wherein the first excerpts are located at locations within the digital content prior to the indication;
selecting second excerpts of second digital content based at least in part on a number of user interactions within individual excerpts of the second excerpts and a number of reviews of the second digital content that reference the individual excerpts of the second excerpts;
ranking excerpts of a first set of the first excerpts; and
determining a highest-ranked excerpt of the first set of the first excerpts, wherein a first excerpt of the first set of the first excerpts is the highest-ranked paragraph;
displaying the first excerpt of the first set of the first excerpts on a display;
displaying a first timeline in association with the first set on the display, the first timeline indicating a location of the first excerpt within the digital content, the first timeline corresponding to locations within the digital content from a beginning of the digital content to an end of the digital content, and the first timeline including first indicators corresponding to locations of the individual excepts of the first excerpts;
hiding a portion of the first timeline corresponding to a portion of the digital content beyond the indication corresponding to the furthest displayed portion of the digital content;
receiving a selection of a second excerpt of the first set of the first excerpts on the display;
displaying the second excerpt of the first set of the first excerpts on the display;
displaying a third excerpt of a second set of the second excerpts on the display;
displaying a second timeline in association with the second set on the display, the second timeline indicating a location of the third excerpt within the digital content, and the second timeline including second indicators corresponding to locations of the individual excerpts of the second excerpts; and
updating the first timeline to display a location of the second excerpt within the digital content.

16. The method of claim 15, wherein the digital content comprises first digital content, and the method further comprising:

receiving user input indicating selection of the second digital content; and
displaying a second excerpt of a second set of the second excerpts on the display.

17. The method of claim 16, wherein:

the first digital content comprises a first digital work and the second digital content comprises a second digital work; and
the user input indicates selection of the second digital work.

18. The method of claim 16, wherein:

the first digital content comprises a first digital work and the second digital content comprises a second digital work; and
the user input indicates a subject, the second excerpts relating to the subject.

19. The method of claim 18, wherein the subject comprises at least one of:

an overview of the second digital work;
a character;
an entity;
a named entity;
an object;
a term;
a place;
an event; or
a topic.

20. The method of claim 15, further comprising:

determining a first portion of the timeline that is prior to the indication; and
determining a second portion of the timeline that is after the indication.
Referenced Cited
U.S. Patent Documents
5544352 August 6, 1996 Egger
5832494 November 3, 1998 Egger
7302638 November 27, 2007 Wolfe
7606809 October 20, 2009 Soroca
7953736 May 31, 2011 Rinearson
8170979 May 1, 2012 Rinearson
8356248 January 15, 2013 Killalea
8566348 October 22, 2013 Rinearson
8606775 December 10, 2013 Story, Jr.
8615513 December 24, 2013 Story, Jr.
8676937 March 18, 2014 Rapaport
8799493 August 5, 2014 MacInnis
8799765 August 5, 2014 MacInnis
8839091 September 16, 2014 Ramamurthy
8842085 September 23, 2014 Goodspeed
8914386 December 16, 2014 Story, Jr.
8972420 March 3, 2015 Story, Jr.
8977982 March 10, 2015 Amacker
8994755 March 31, 2015 Robinson
9002701 April 7, 2015 Kandekar
9069754 June 30, 2015 Kandekar
9087043 July 21, 2015 Kandekar
9128581 September 8, 2015 Goodspeed
9152734 October 6, 2015 Rinearson
9158741 October 13, 2015 Hansen
9165381 October 20, 2015 Latta
9176938 November 3, 2015 Kerschen
9185134 November 10, 2015 Story, Jr.
9251130 February 2, 2016 Lynnes
9264501 February 16, 2016 Story, Jr.
9405825 August 2, 2016 Kuznetsova
9471203 October 18, 2016 O'Dell, III
9471547 October 18, 2016 Goodspeed
9489853 November 8, 2016 Sherman
9552344 January 24, 2017 Allen
9552346 January 24, 2017 Allen
9613003 April 4, 2017 Goodspeed
9639518 May 2, 2017 Goodspeed
9760547 September 12, 2017 Brougher
9910916 March 6, 2018 Tseng
9928218 March 27, 2018 Cranfill
10031903 July 24, 2018 Haynes, II
10108706 October 23, 2018 Goodspeed
20030009459 January 9, 2003 Chastain
20030218634 November 27, 2003 Kuchinsky
20040009813 January 15, 2004 Wind
20050069849 March 31, 2005 McKinney
20060242554 October 26, 2006 Gerace
20060242564 October 26, 2006 Egger
20070219963 September 20, 2007 Soroca
20080005064 January 3, 2008 Sarukkai
20080168073 July 10, 2008 Siegel
20080243805 October 2, 2008 Gutta, Sr.
20080282187 November 13, 2008 Buschman
20090172558 July 2, 2009 Pickens
20090265338 October 22, 2009 Kraft
20090322756 December 31, 2009 Robertson
20100281074 November 4, 2010 Bailor et al.
20100332980 December 30, 2010 Sun
20100332992 December 30, 2010 Donoho et al.
20110047166 February 24, 2011 Stading
20110087956 April 14, 2011 Sherman
20120005209 January 5, 2012 Rinearson
20120036423 February 9, 2012 Haynes, II
20120078612 March 29, 2012 Kandekar
20120078613 March 29, 2012 Kandekar
20120079372 March 29, 2012 Kandekar
20120158492 June 21, 2012 Ye
20120158706 June 21, 2012 Story, Jr.
20120158707 June 21, 2012 Story, Jr.
20120210203 August 16, 2012 Kandekar
20120233539 September 13, 2012 Reed
20120290950 November 15, 2012 Rapaport
20120311438 December 6, 2012 Cranfill
20130080881 March 28, 2013 Goodspeed
20130104028 April 25, 2013 Murray
20130145327 June 6, 2013 Rinearson
20130155118 June 20, 2013 Robinson
20130173531 July 4, 2013 Rinearson
20130185657 July 18, 2013 Gunawardena
20130198600 August 1, 2013 Lockhart
20130219270 August 22, 2013 Cranfill
20130232134 September 5, 2013 Haugen
20130254645 September 26, 2013 Haynes, II
20130311870 November 21, 2013 Worsley
20130321390 December 5, 2013 Latta
20140013242 January 9, 2014 Beresford-Wood
20140019893 January 16, 2014 Gudmundsson
20140033128 January 30, 2014 Patterson
20140046973 February 13, 2014 Rinearson
20140101542 April 10, 2014 Albrecht
20140101544 April 10, 2014 Albrecht
20140101606 April 10, 2014 Albrecht
20140143241 May 22, 2014 Barello
20140250377 September 4, 2014 Bisca
20140372956 December 18, 2014 Bisca
20150033110 January 29, 2015 Park
20150089368 March 26, 2015 Lester
20150127639 May 7, 2015 Story, Jr.
20150154166 June 4, 2015 Allen
20150154290 June 4, 2015 Allen
20150177977 June 25, 2015 Amacker
20150193408 July 9, 2015 Ho
20150339034 November 26, 2015 Garcia
20150348157 December 3, 2015 Garcia
20150370453 December 24, 2015 Kandekar
20150379879 December 31, 2015 Selkirk
20160026697 January 28, 2016 Rinearson
20160034427 February 4, 2016 Pathak
20160071424 March 10, 2016 Harney
20160078102 March 17, 2016 Crouch
20160179794 June 23, 2016 Massand
20160379392 December 29, 2016 Allen
20170048337 February 16, 2017 Fraccaroli
20170132190 May 11, 2017 Koutrika
Other references
  • Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,935, dated Jul. 11, 2017, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 17 pages.
  • Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,879, dated May 31, 2017, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 39 pages.
  • Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,935, dated Jan. 12, 2017, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 15 pages.
  • Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,879, dated Nov. 29, 2016, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 32 pages.
  • Amy J.C. Trappey, et. al., “Automated Patent Document Summarization for R&D Intellectual Property Management”, 2006, IEE, pp. 1-6.
  • Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,879, dated Sep. 10, 2018, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 44 pages.
  • Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,879, dated Apr. 2, 2018, Tseng et al., “Digital Content Excerpt Identification”, 23 pages.
  • Non Final Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 14/487,879, dated Mar. 19, 2019, Tseng, “Digital Content Excerpt Identification,” 50 pages.
Patent History
Patent number: 10380226
Type: Grant
Filed: Sep 16, 2014
Date of Patent: Aug 13, 2019
Assignee: Amazon Technologies, Inc. (Seattle, WA)
Inventors: Walter Manching Tseng (Bellevue, WA), Abhishek Patnia (Seattle, WA), Adam Joseph Iser (Seattle, WA), Christopher Michael Ellis (Seattle, WA), Alice Chu (Seattle, WA)
Primary Examiner: Scott T Baderman
Assistant Examiner: Benjamin Smith
Application Number: 14/487,909
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Clustering Or Classification (epo) (707/E17.089)
International Classification: G06F 17/21 (20060101); G06F 3/0485 (20130101); G06F 3/0486 (20130101); G06F 17/24 (20060101); G06F 15/02 (20060101); G06F 3/0483 (20130101);